ARTS Page 19
FORUM Support divestment efforts 12 SPORTS Men’s basketball team falls to 4-10 16
‘YEAR IN REVIEW’ CREATIVE COMMONS
The Independent Student Newspaper
the
of
B r a n d e is U n i v e r sit y S i n c e 1 9 4 9
Justice
Volume LXX, Number 13
www.thejustice.org
Tuesday, January 16, 2018
MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. DAY
ADMINISTRATION
Univ. expands ombuds service ■ The University's Ombuds
Office now includes faculty, staff and alumni in their services to the community. By KIRBY KOCHANOWSKI JUSTICE EDITOR
The University announced an expansion of its Ombuds Office and introduced three staff members that will facilitate ombuds services to community members, undergraduate and graduate students. Prior, these services were not provided to community members beyond students. The Ombuds Office “will make it possible for all members of the Brandeis community — students, faculty, staff, alumni and others — to access conflict-resolution assistance for situations they might encounter at the university,” wrote Chief Diversity Officer and Vice President of Diversity, Equity and
Inclusion Mark Brimhall-Vargas in a Jan. 10 email to the community. The new members of the office include Don Greenstein, Cathy Burack and Elena Lewis. Burack and Lewis both come from within the Brandeis community. Lewis has been at Brandeis for 14 years. She earned her master’s degree in sociology at Brandeis and works as the director of the Student Support Services Program. She has also served as a student ombudsman at Brandeis for the past two years. Lewis was unavailable for comment. Burack works as a senior fellow for higher education at the Center for Youth and Communities in the Heller School for Social Policy and Management. At Heller she has also served as a member of the Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Steering Committee, as a member of the Master of Public Policy program’s Diversity Committee, and
See OMBUDS, 7 ☛
STUDENT LIFE
Commuters request return of lounge space ■ Commuter students wrote
a letter to administrators following partial restriction of commuter lounge hours. By ABBY PATKIN JUSTICE EDITOR
The expansion of the ombuds office has reignited a longstanding debate over campus space allocation, with several commuter students releasing a statement of objection regarding the decision to house the Ombuds Office in the Commuter Lounge. In a Nov. 10 email to students with access to the lounge, Operations Specialist JV Souffrant, who manages the Shapiro Campus Center, notified commuters that the Ombuds Office would be sharing the lounge, located on the third floor of the SCC. Students would not have
access to the lounge during the ombuds’ hours of operation, he added. In response to Souffrant’s email, Fox Aguirre ’19 emailed fellow commuter students asking their thoughts on the restricted lounge access. This conversation resulted in a statement of objection to the decision to “annex” the lounge. Of the 24 commuters with access to the lounge at the time of the Nov. 10 announcement, 12 signed on to the statement. The students delivered a copy of the statement to Souffrant and Vice President for Campus Operations Jim Gray on Dec. 20 and posted a copy outside the lounge. Gray and Souffrant could not immediately be reached for comment. According to the Student Activities website, the Commuter Lounge is accessible 24/7 and is an “exclusive” campus resource for students who live off campus.
NATALIA WIATER/the Justice
LOVE: Rebelle dance team performed for the University's annual MLK Jr. Day Memorial in the Shapiro Campus Center Theater.
Student leaders proclaim a ‘Love that Hate Can’t Stop’ ■ Student scholars and
community performers came together for celebration and reflection on MLK Jr. day. By JOCELYN GOULD JUSTICE EDITORIAL ASSISTANT
“Do they know about the Love that Hate Can’t Stop?” the members of Platinum, the Brandeis Step Team, shouted at the beginning of the University’s 13th Annual Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial. Monday night’s event, themed “The Love That h8 Can’t Stop,” was a celebration of love and unity, centered around the memory of King and his legacy. After Platinum opened the memorial, Justin Cox, a soloist from Nichols College, sang and Dean of Students Jamele Adams spoke, opening the night with the powerful declaration, “Dr. King is not dead.” “He led to our genius, our creativity, our love and our resilience,” Adams said, elaborating on King’s immorality. He is “present on a regular basis with us. We represent that love.” Speaking of the present political and social situation, Adams said, “We live in a time that we never
thought that we would live again.” He turned to the story of Quincy Merlin, an 8-year-old boy from Claremont, New Hampshire, who was hanged when the young white boys he was playing with turned violent, but Merlin freed himself and survived. Adams said this tragedy is not “how life is supposed to be.” Adams continued, “We need to be the folks that make that change. I know that the students here at Brandeis do that on a regular basis, and I ask you to continue to push us, and not take it easy on us. Make us hold ourselves accountable for what we do.” After Adams’ speech, producer and rapper Bethel Adekogbe ’20 layered musical rhythms with facts about King’s life. He concluded his performance with King’s own voice, reciting the famous declaration, “I have a dream.” Drawing on the night’s theme, Interim Program Manager at the Office of Prevention Services Elba Valerio recited a poem she wrote about the meaning of love, highlighting the different types of affection and passion a person can experience. Her poem, recited first in Spanish and then paraphrased in English, was paired with photos from her life, echoing her message.
The dance groups TOXIC and Rebelle performed between speakers. Michelle Dennis ’18 performed a solo interpretive dance while children’s voices recited the names of men and women immortalized by the Black Lives Matter movement. Wil Jones ’18 delivered the night’s keynote speech, grappling with the difficult relationship he has had throughout his life with King’s legacy and the imperfect reality of his life. “It was not until I was in college that I was first able to begin to grapple with what his legacy … meant to me,” Jones said. “How do I make sense of the parts of his legacy that weren’t present in the sanitized version that I was force fed as a child?” he asked, drawing particular attention to King’s conflicted relationship with Black feminism. “How can I celebrate him in the name of equality when women within the civil rights movement received little recognition in public, in private?” Jones asked. He went on to examine King’s adultery: “As a public figure, a reverend, a leader of civil movement, does his marital discretion not deserve scrutiny?” Jones warned about modern society falling into “traps of celebra-
See MLK, 7 ☛
Midyear Orientation
Keeping it competitive
Hill to Hollywood
The incoming Midyear class was welcomed onto campus last week.
The women’s basketball team has remained successful despite a tough conference.
Prof. Anita Hill was selected to lead a Hollywood commission on sexual harassment in the industry.
ANDREW BAXTER/the Justice
For tips or info email editor@thejustice.org
See COMMUTER, 7 ☛
Waltham, Mass.
Let your voice be heard! Submit letters to the editor online at www.thejustice.org
FEATURES 8
INDEX
SPORTS 16
NATALIA WIATER/the Justice
ARTS SPORTS
17 13
EDITORIAL FEATURES
10 OPINION 8 POLICE LOG
10 2
News 3
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